Community
language learning
Community language learning
(CLL) is an approach in which students work together to develop what aspects of
a language they would like to learn. The teacher acts as a counsellor and a paraphraser,
while the learner acts as a collaborator, although sometimes this role can be
changed.
Examples of these types of
communities have recently arisen with the explosion of educational resources for
language learning on the
The CLL method was developed by
Charles A. Curran, a professor of psychology
at Loyola University in
Chicago.[1]
This method refers to two roles: that of the know-er (teacher) and student
(learner). Also the method draws on the counseling metaphor and refers to these
respective roles as a counselor and a client. According to Curran, a counselor
helps a client understand his or her own problems better by 'capturing the
essence of the clients concern ...[and] relating [the client's] affect to
cognition...;' in effect, understanding the client and responding in a detached
yet considerate manner.
To restate, the counselor blends
what the client feels and what he is learning in order to make the experience a
meaningful one. Often, this supportive role requires greater energy expenditure
than an 'average' teacher.
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